The Very High Premature Mortality Rate among Active Professional Wrestlers Is Primarily Due to Cardiovascular Disease

The very high premature mortality rate among active professional wrestlers is primarily due to cardiovascular disease / C.W. Herman, A.S. Conlon, M. Rubenfire, A.R. Burghardt, S.J. McGregor. – (Public Library of Science one 9 (2014) 11 (5 November) : p. 1-7).
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109945. eCollection 2014

Content:

- Introduction
- Methods
• Ethics Statement
• Calculations of Mortality Rates
• Survival Analysis
- Results
• Survival Estimates
- Discussion
- Conclusion
- References

PURPOSE:
Recently, much media attention has been given to the premature deaths in professional wrestlers. Since no formal studies exist that have statistically examined the probability of premature mortality in professional wrestlers, we determined survival estimates for active wresters over the past quarter century to establish the factors contributing to the premature mortality of these individuals.
METHODS:
Data including cause of death was obtained from public records and wrestling publications in wrestlers who were active between January 1, 1985 and December 31, 2011. 557 males were considered consistently active wrestlers during this time period. 2007 published mortality rates from the Center for Disease Control were used to compare the general population to the wrestlers by age, BMI, time period, and cause of death. Survival estimates and Cox hazard regression models were fit to determine incident premature deaths and factors associated with lower survival. Cumulative incidence function (CIF) estimates given years wrestled was obtained using a competing risks model for cause of death.
RESULTS:
The mortality for all wrestlers over the 26-year study period was.007 deaths/total person-years or 708 per 100,000 per year, and 16% of deaths occurred below age 50 years. Among wrestlers, the leading cause of deaths based on CIF was cardiovascular-related (38%). For cardiovascular-related deaths, drug overdose-related deaths and cancer deaths, wrestler mortality rates were respectively 15.1, 122.7 and 6.4 times greater than those of males in the general population. Survival estimates from hazard models indicated that BMI is significantly associated with the hazard of death from total time wrestling (p<0.0001).
CONCLUSION:
Professional wrestlers are more likely to die prematurely from cardiovascular disease compared to the general population and morbidly obese wrestlers are especially at risk. Results from this study may be useful for professional wrestlers, as well as wellness policy and medical care implementation.

Original document

Parameters

Science
Research / Study
Date
5 November 2014
People
Burghardt, Andrew R.
Conlon, Anna S. C.
Herman, Christopher W.
McGregor, J.
Rubenfire, Melvyn
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United States of America
Language
English
Sport/IFs
Wrestling (UWW) - United World Wrestling
Medical terms
Long term effects
Document category
Scientific article
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Pdf file
Date generated
8 February 2016
Date of last modification
26 September 2016
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